When should countries intervene to prevent mass murder?
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
Gideon talks to Indian opposition Congress politician and former diplomat Shashi Tharoor about the concept of the 'responsibility to protect', which allows countries to intervene militarily in order to protect a population from mass murder. This was first mooted by Kofi Annan in the late 1990s after the Rwandan genocide. Can it be applied today, and in what circumstances? Clips: Global News, C-SPAN
Rwandan genocide fugitive arrested in South Africa
There can be no impunity for the crime of aggression against Ukraine
‘The garden of war’: horseback killers return to Darfur
Pol Pot’s prime minister loses appeal against genocide conviction
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Presented by Gideon Rachman. Produced by Fiona Symon. Sound design is by Breen Turner
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
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